533 research outputs found
The Radio Afterglow From GRB 980519: A Test of the Jet and Circumstellar Models
We present multi-frequency radio observations from the afterglow of GRB
980519 beginning 7.2 hours after the gamma-ray burst and ending 63 days later.
The fast decline in the optical and X-ray light curves for this burst has been
interpreted either as afterglow emission originating from a collimated outflow
-- a jet -- or the result of a blast wave propagating into a medium whose
density is shaped by the wind of an evolved massive star. These two models
predict divergent behavior for the radio afterglow, and therefore, radio
observations are capable, in principle, of discriminating between the two. We
show that a wind model describes the subsequent evolution of the radio
afterglow rather well. However, we see strong modulation of the light curve,
which we interpret as diffractive scintillation. These variations prevent us
from decisively rejecting the jet model.Comment: ApJ, submitte
BeppoSAX Observations of the Maser Sy2 Galaxy: ESO103-G35
We have made BeppoSAX observations of the Seyfert 2/1.9 galaxy ESO103-G35,
which contains a nuclear maser source and is known to be heavily absorbed in
the X-rays. Analysis of the X-ray spectra observed by SAX in October 1996 and
1997 yields a spectral index 0.74+/-0.07, typical of Seyfert galaxies and
consistent with earlier observations of this source. The strong, soft X-ray
absorption has column density 1.79E(23)/cm^2, again consistent with earlier
results. The best fitting spectrum is that of a power law with a high energy
cutoff at 29+/-10 keV, a cold, marginally resolved Fe Kalpha line with EW 290
eV (1996) and a mildly ionized Fe K-edge at 7.37 keV. The Kalpha line and cold
absorption are consistent with origin in a accretion disk/torus through which
our line-of-sight passes at a radial distance of pc. The Fe K-edge is
mildly ionized suggesting the presence of ionized gas probably in the inner
accretion disk, close to the central source or in a separate warm absorber. The
data quality is too low to distinguish between these possibilities but the
edge-on geometry implied by the water maser emission favors the former.
Comparison with earlier observations of ESO103-G35 shows little/no change in
spectral parameters while the flux changes by factors of a few on timescales of
a few months. The 2--10 keV flux decreased by a factor of 2.7 between Oct 1996
and Oct 1997 with no detectable change in the count rate >20 keV suggesting a
constant or delayed response reflection component. The high energy cutoff is
lower than the typical 300keV values seen in Seyfert galaxies. A significant
subset of similar sources would affect current models of the AGN contribution
to the cosmic X-ray background which generally assume a high energy cutoff of
300 keV.Comment: 22 pages, postscript file, accepted for publication in Ap
X-Ray Light Curves of Gamma-ray Bursts Detected with the All-Sky Monitor on RXTE
We present X-ray light curves (1.5-12 keV) for fifteen gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs) detected by the All-Sky Monitor on the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. We
compare these soft X-ray light curves with count rate histories obtained by the
high-energy (>12 keV) experiments BATSE, Konus-Wind, the BeppoSAX Gamma-Ray
Burst Monitor, and the burst monitor on Ulysses. We discuss these light curves
within the context of a simple relativistic fireball and synchrotron shock
paradigm, and we address the possibility of having observed the transition
between a GRB and its afterglow. The light curves show diverse morphologies,
with striking differences between energy bands. In several bursts, intervals of
significant emission are evident in the ASM energy range with little or no
corresponding emission apparent in the high-energy light curves. For example,
the final peak of GRB 970815 as recorded by the ASM is only detected in the
softest BATSE energy bands. We also study the duration of bursts as a function
of energy. Simple, singly-peaked bursts seem consistent with the E^{-0.5} power
law expected from an origin in synchrotron radiation, but durations of bursts
that exhibit complex temporal structure are not consistent with this
prediction. Bursts such as GRB 970828 that show many short spikes of emission
at high energies last significantly longer at low energies than the synchrotron
cooling law would predict.Comment: 15 pages with 20 figures and 2 tables. In emulateapj format. Accepted
by ApJ
Prompt and delayed emission properties of Gamma-Ray Bursts observed with BeppoSAX
We investigated the spectral evolution in the 2--700 keV energy band of
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) detected by the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GRBM) and
localized with the Wide Field Cameras (WFCs) aboard the BeppoSAX satellite
before May 1998. Most of them have been followed-up with the Narrow Field
Instruments aboard the same satellite. In the light of these results we discuss
open issues on the GRB phenomenon. We find that the optically thin synchrotron
shock model (SSM) provides an acceptable representation of most of the
time-resolved GRB spectra extending down to 2 keV, except in the initial phases
of several bursts and during the whole duration of the quite strong GRB970111,
where a low-energy photon depletion with respect to the thin SSM spectrum is
observed. We find that the X-ray afterglow starts at about 50% of the GRB
duration, and that its fluence, as computed from the WFC light curve, is
consistent with the decay law found from the afterglow NFI observations. We
also investigate the hydrodynamical evolution of the GRB in our sample and
their associated afterglow, when it was detected. We find that the photon index
of the latest spectrum of the GRB prompt emission is correlated with the index
of the afterglow fading law, when available, as expected on the basis of an
external shock of a relativistic fireball.Comment: 35 pages, 1 LaTeX file, 20 postscript figures, 1 postscript table,
accepted for pubblication in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series.
Corrected error bars in Fig.2/GRB980425/panel B and GRB980425 fluence in Tab.
ROSAT Blank Field Sources I: Sample Selection and Archival Data
We have identified a population of blank field sources (or `blanks') among
the ROSAT bright unidentified X-ray sources with faint optical counterparts.
The extreme X-ray over optical flux ratio of blanks is not compatible with the
main classes of X-ray emitters except for extreme BL Lacertae objects. From the
analysis of ROSAT archival data we found no indication of variability and
evidence for only three sources, out of 16, needing absorption in excess of the
Galactic value. We also found evidence for an extended nature for only one of
the 5 blanks with a serendipitous HRI detection; this source (1WGAJ1226.9+3332)
was confirmed as a z=0.89 cluster of galaxies. Palomar images reveal the
presence of a red (O-E~2) counterpart in the X-ray error circle for 6 blanks.
The identification process brought to the discovery of another high z cluster
of galaxies, one (possibly extreme) BL Lac, two ultraluminous X-ray sources in
nearby galaxies and two apparently normal type1 AGNs. These AGNs, together with
4 more AGN-like objects seem to form a well defined group: they present
unabsorbed X-ray spectra but red Palomar counterparts. We discuss the possible
explanations for the discrepancy between the X-ray and optical data, among
which: a suppressed big blue bump emission, an extreme dust to gas (~40-60 the
Galactic ratio), a high redshift (z>3.5) QSO nature, an atypical dust grain
size distribution and a dusty warm absorber. These AGN-like blanks seem to be
the bright (and easier to study) analogs of the sources which are found in deep
Chandra observations. Three more blanks have a still unknown nature.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, accepted by ApJ main journa
BeppoSAX Observations of GRB980425: Detection of the Prompt Event and Monitoring of the Error Box
We present BeppoSAX follow-up observations of GRB980425 obtained with the
Narrow Field Instruments (NFI) in April, May, and November 1998. The first NFI
observation has detected within the 8' radius error box of the GRB an X-ray
source positionally consistent with the supernova 1998bw, which exploded within
a day of GRB980425, and a fainter X-ray source, not consistent with the
position of the supernova. The former source is detected in the following NFI
pointings and exhibits a decline of a factor of two in six months. If it is
associated with SN 1998bw, this is the first detection of X-ray emission from a
Type I supernova above 2 keV. The latter source exhibits only marginally
significant variability. The X-ray spectra and variability of the supernova are
compared with thermal and non-thermal models of supernova high energy emission.
Based on the BeppoSAX data, it is not possible to firmly establish which of the
two detected sources is the GRB X-ray counterpart, although probability
considerations favor the supernova.Comment: 16 pages, Latex, 6 PostScript figures and 1 GIF figure, 2 tables,
submitted to The Astrophysical Journa
X-Ray/Ultraviolet Observing Campaign of the Markarian 279 Active Galactic Nucleus Outflow: a close look at the absorbing/emitting gas with Chandra-LETGS
We present a Chandra-LETGS observation of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 279. This
observation was carried out simultaneously with HST-STIS and FUSE, in the
context of a multiwavelength study of this source. The Chandra pointings were
spread over ten days for a total exposure time of ~360 ks. The spectrum of
Mrk279 shows evidence of broad emission features, especially at the wavelength
of the OVII triplet. We quantitatively explore the possibility that this
emission is produced in the broad line region (BLR). We modeled the broad UV
emission lines seen in the FUSE and HST-STIS spectra following the ``locally
optimally emitting cloud" approach. We find that the X-ray lines luminosity
derived from the best fit BLR model can match the X-ray features, suggesting
that the gas producing the UV lines is sufficient to account also for the X-ray
emission. The spectrum is absorbed by ionized gas whose total column density is
~5x10^{20} cm^{-2}. The absorption spectrum can be modeled by two distinct gas
components (log xi ~ 0.47 and 2.49, respectively) both showing a significant
outflow velocity. However, the data allow also the presence of intermediate
ionization components. The distribution of the column densities of such extra
components as a function of the ionization parameter is not consistent with a
continuous, power law-like, absorber, suggesting a complex structure for the
gas outflow for Mrk 279 (abridged).Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures. To appear in A&
Microtubules in Bacteria: Ancient Tubulins Build a Five-Protofilament Homolog of the Eukaryotic Cytoskeleton
Microtubules play crucial roles in cytokinesis, transport, and motility, and are therefore superb targets for anti-cancer drugs. All tubulins evolved from a common ancestor they share with the distantly related bacterial cell division protein FtsZ, but while eukaryotic tubulins evolved into highly conserved microtubule-forming heterodimers, bacterial FtsZ presumably continued to function as single homopolymeric protofilaments as it does today. Microtubules have not previously been found in bacteria, and we lack insight into their evolution from the tubulin/FtsZ ancestor. Using electron cryomicroscopy, here we show that the tubulin homologs BtubA and BtubB form microtubules in bacteria and suggest these be referred to as “bacterial microtubules” (bMTs). bMTs share important features with their eukaryotic counterparts, such as straight protofilaments and similar protofilament interactions. bMTs are composed of only five protofilaments, however, instead of the 13 typical in eukaryotes. These and other results suggest that rather than being derived from modern eukaryotic tubulin, BtubA and BtubB arose from early tubulin intermediates that formed small microtubules. Since we show that bacterial microtubules can be produced in abundance in vitro without chaperones, they should be useful tools for tubulin research and drug screening
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